http://www.iht.com/articles/2008/05/11/mideast/saudi.php

 Young Saudis ask, 'Where is the love?'
By Michael Slackman
Sunday, May 11, 2008

RIYADH, Saudi Arabia: Nader al-Mutairi stiffened his shoulders,
clenched his fists and said, "Let's do our mission." Then the young
man stepped into the cool, empty lobby of a dental clinic, intent on
getting the phone number of one of the young women working as a
receptionist.

Asking a woman for her number can cause a young man anxiety anywhere.
But in Saudi Arabia, getting caught with an unrelated woman can mean
arrest, a possible flogging and dishonor, the worst penalty of all in
a society where preserving a family's reputation depends on faithful
adherence to a strict code of separation between the sexes.

Above all, Nader feared that his cousin, Enad al-Mutairi, would find
out that he was breaking the rules. Nader is engaged to Enad's
17-year-old sister, Sarah. "Please don't talk to Enad about this," he
said. "He will kill me."

The sun was already low in the sky as Nader entered the clinic. Almost
instantly, his resolve faded. His shoulders drooped, his hands
unclenched and his voice began to quiver. "I am not lucky today, let's
leave," he said.

It was a flash of rebellion, almost instantly quelled. In the West,
youth is typically a time to challenge authority. But what stood out
in dozens of interviews with young men and women here was how
completely they have accepted the religious and cultural demands of
the Muslim world's most conservative society.

They may chafe against the rules, even try to evade them at times, but
they can be merciless in their condemnation of those who flout them
too brazenly. And they are committed to perpetuating the rules with
their own children.

That suggests that Saudi Arabia's strict interpretation of Islam,
largely uncontested at home by the next generation and spread abroad
by Saudi money in a time of religious revival, will increasingly shape
how Muslims around the world will live their faith.

Young men like Nader and Enad are taught that they are the guardians
of the family's reputation, expected to shield their female relatives
from shame and avoid dishonoring their families by their own behavior.
It is a classic example of how the Saudis have melded their faith with
their desert tribal traditions.

"One of the most important Arab traditions is honor," Enad said. "If
my sister goes in the street and someone assaults her, she won't be
able to protect herself. The nature of men is that men are more
rational. Women are not rational. With one or two or three words, a
man can get what he wants from a woman. If I call someone and a girl
answers, I have to apologize. It's a huge deal. It is a violation of
the house."

Enad is the alpha male, a 20-year-old police officer with an explosive
temper and a fondness for teasing. Nader, 22, is soft-spoken, with a
gentle smile and an inclination to follow rather than lead.

They are more than cousins; they are lifelong friends and confidants.
That is often the case in Saudi Arabia, where families are frequently
large and insular. Enad and Nader are among several dozen Mutairi
cousins who have spent virtually all their free time together since
childhood: Boys learning to be boys, and now men, together.

They are average, young Saudi men, not wealthy, not poor, not from the
more liberal south or east, but residents of the country's
conservative heartland, Riyadh. It is a flat, clean city of five
million that gleams with oil wealth, two glass skyscrapers and roads
clogged with oversized SUVs. It offers young men very little in the
way of entertainment, with no movie theaters and few sports
facilities. If they are unmarried, they cannot even enter the malls
where women shop.

Nader sank deep into a cushioned chair in a hotel café, sipping fresh
orange juice, fiddling with his cellphone. If there is one accessory
that allows a bit of self-expression for Saudi men, it is their
cellphones. Nader's is filled with pictures of pretty women taken from
the Internet, tight face shots of singers and actresses. His ring tone
is a love song in Arabic. One of the most popular ring tones among his
cousins is the theme song to "Titanic."

"I'm very romantic," Nader said. "I don't like action movies. I like
romance. 'Titanic' is No. 1. I like 'Head Over Heels.' Romance is
love."

Three days later, in a nearby restaurant, Nader and Enad were
concentrating on eating with utensils, feeling a bit awkward because
they normally eat with their right hands.

Suddenly, the young men stopped focusing on their food. A woman had
entered the restaurant, alone. She was completely draped in a black
abaya, her face covered by a black veil, her hair and ears covered by
a black cloth pulled tight.

"Look at the batman," Nader said derisively, snickering.

Enad pretended to toss his burning cigarette at the woman, who by now
had been seated at a table. The glaring young men unnerved her, as
though her parents had caught her doing something wrong.

"She is alone, without a man," Enad said, explaining why they were
disgusted, not just with her, but with her male relatives, too,
wherever they were.

When a man joined her at the table - someone they assumed was her
husband - she removed her face veil, which fueled Enad and Nader's
hostility. They continued to make mocking hand gestures and comments
until the couple changed tables. Even then, the woman was so flustered
she held the cloth self-consciously over her face throughout her meal.

"Thank God our women are at home," Enad said.

Nader and Enad pray five times a day, often stopping whatever they are
doing to go off to the nearest mosque with their cousins. Prayer is
mandatory in the kingdom, and the religious police force all shops to
shut down during prayer times. But it is also casual, as routine for
Nader and Enad as taking a coffee break.

To Nader and Enad, prayer is essential. In Enad's view, jihad is too,
not the more moderate approach, which emphasizes doing good deeds, but
the idea of picking up a weapon and fighting in places like Iraq and
Afghanistan.

"Jihad is not a crime, it is a duty," Enad said in casual conversation.

"If someone comes in to your house, will you stand there or will you
fight them?" Enad said. "Arab or Muslim lands are like one house."

Would he go fight?

"I would need permission from my parents," he said.

Nader, though, said, "Don't ask me, I am afraid of the government."

The concept is such a fundamental principle, so embedded in their
psyches, that they do not see any conflict between their belief in
armed jihad and their work as security agents of the state. As a
police officer, Enad helps conduct raids on what are suspected to be
terrorist hideouts. Nader works in the military as a communications
officer.

Each earns about 4,000 riyals a month, about $1,200, not nearly enough
to become independent from their parents. But that is not a huge
concern, because fathers are expected to provide for even their grown
children.

Each young man has a mustache and goatee, and most of the time dresses
in a traditional robe. Nader prefers the white thobe, an ankle-length
gown; Enad prefers beige.

But on weekends, they opt for the wild and crazy guy look, often
wearing running pants, tight short-sleeved shirts, bright colors,
stripes and plaids together, lots of Velcro and elastic on their
shoes. In Western-style clothes, they both seem smaller, and a touch
on the pudgy side. Nader says softly, "I don't exercise."

There are eight other children in the house where Enad lives with his
father, his mother and his father's second wife. The apartment has
little furniture, with nothing on the walls. The men and boys gather
in a living room off the main hall, sitting on soiled beige
wall-to-wall carpeting, watching a television set propped up on a
crooked cabinet. The women have a similar living room, nearly
identical, behind closed doors.

Enad and Nader were always close, but their relationship changed when
Nader and Sarah became engaged. Enad's father agreed to let Nader
marry one of his four daughters. Nader picked Sarah, though she is not
the oldest, in part, he said, because he actually saw her face when
she was a child and recalled that she was pretty.

They quickly signed a wedding contract, making them legally married,
but by tradition they do not consider themselves so until the wedding
party, set for this spring. During the intervening months, they are
not allowed to see each other or spend any time together.

Nader said he expected to see his new wife for the first time after
their wedding ceremony - which would also be segregated by sex - when
they are photographed as husband and wife.

Soon his cellphone beeped, signaling a text message. Nader blushed,
stuck his tongue out and turned slightly away to read the message,
which came from "My Love." He sneaks secret phone calls and messages
with Sarah. When she calls, or writes a message, his phone flashes "My
Love" over two interlocked red hearts.

"I have a connection," he said, quietly, as he read, explaining how
Sarah manages to communicate with him.

His connection is Enad, who secretly slipped Sarah a cellphone that
Nader had bought for her. These conversations are taboo and could
cause a dispute between the families. So their talks were clandestine,
like sneaking out for a date after the parents go to bed.

Enad keeps the secret, but it adds to an underlying tension between
the two, as Nader tries to develop his own identity as a future head
of household, as a man.

Nader grew up in Riyadh, and his parents, like Enad's, are first
cousins. Enad says his way of thinking was forged in the village of
Najkh, 560 kilometers, or 350 miles, west of Riyadh, where he lived
until he was 14 with his grandfather. It is where he still feels most
comfortable.

When he can, he has a cousin drive him to his grandfather's home, a
one-story cement box in the desert, six kilometers from the nearest
house. There is a walled-in yard of sand with piles of wood used to
heat the house in the cold desert winters.

Inside there is no furniture, just a few cushions on the floor and a
prayer rug pointing in the direction of Mecca. Enad and his cousins
absentmindedly toss trash out the kitchen window, and around the yard,
expecting that the "houseboy" will clean up after them.

Enad is quiet and hides his cigarettes when his grandfather comes
through. He would never tell his father or grandfather that he smokes.
Enad remains stone-faced when a cousin mentions that another of his
cousins, a woman named Al Atti, 22, is interested in him. The topic
came up because another cousin, Raed, had asked Al Atti to marry him,
and she refused.

The conflict and flirtation touched on so many issues - manhood, love,
family relations - that it sparked a flurry of whispering, and even
Enad was drawn in.

Al Atti had let her sisters know that she liked Enad but made it clear
that she could never admit that publicly. So she asked a sister to
spread the word from cousin to cousin, and ultimately to Enad.

Word finally reached Enad, who tried to stay cool but was clearly
interested, and flattered. At this point Enad was himself whispering
about Al Atti, trying to figure out a way to communicate with her
without actually talking to her himself. He asked a female visitor to
arrange a call, and then pass along a message of interest.

Enad said it was never his idea to pursue her, but that a man - a real
man - could not reject a woman who wanted him. To get Raed out of the
picture, he suggested that Al Atti's brother take Raed to hear Al
Atti's refusal in person, at her house.

"From behind a wall," Enad said.

"Love is dangerous," Al Atti said as she sat with her sisters in the
house. "It can ruin your reputation."

It was a short visit, two days in the village, and then Enad was back
to Riyadh for work. He seemed to be both excited and tormented by Al
Atti's interest.

That weekend, he and Nader went out to the desert, just outside of
Riyadh, where young men go to drive jeeps in the sand and to relax,
free from the oversight of the religious police and neighbors. They
sat beside each other on a blanket.

Nader began.

"I am a romantic person," he said. "There is no romance."

What Nader meant was that Saudi traditions do not allow for romance
between young, unmarried couples. There are many stories of young men
and women secretly dating, falling in love but being unable to tell
their parents because they could never explain how they knew each
other in the first place. One young couple said that after two years
of secret dating they hired a matchmaker to arrange a phony
introduction so their parents would think that was how they had met.

Now, in the desert, Nader's candor set Enad off.

"He thinks that there is no romance. How is there no romance?" Enad
said, his eyes bulging as he grew angry. "When you get married, be
romantic with your wife. You want to meet a woman on the street so you
can be romantic?"

Nader was intimidated, and frightened.

"No, no," he said.

"Convince me then that you're right," Enad shot back.

"I am saying there is no romance," Nader said, trying to push back.

Enad did not relent, berating his cousin.

Under his breath, Nader said, "Enad knows everything."

Then he folded. "Fine, there is romance," he said, and got up and
walked away, flushed and embarrassed.

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